Chinese tourists visit Tokyo's Ginza district for shopping in August. Japan is the second-most popular overseas destination. [Photo provided to China Daily] |
Since many outbound Chinese tourists are more interested in shopping than traveling, it is fair to call them shopaholics. They spend money on virtually everything, from high-end electronic appliances and luxury goods to daily necessities, such as skin cream and anti-cold medicine.
The large number of Chinese tourists swarming to Japanese stores during Spring Festival to buy electronic toilet seats, equipped with heating and warm water shower functions, have made the headlines, sparking heated debates in the media and drawing the attention of many Chinese netizens.
Some critics even say such outbound Chinese tourists are blind worshippers of foreign products and, therefore, not patriotic. Such emotional finger-pointing is unnecessary and ignores the real issue. The real question is: If Chinese consumers could get viable alternatives in the domestic market, why would they take pains to travel abroad to shop?
Indeed, most products on the shopping lists of outbound Chinese tourists are available in the country's supermarkets, but they are often not of the same quality as those sold in some advanced countries like Japan, the United States and Germany.
Why is there such a demand-supply mismatch? Is it because Chinese producers are incapable of making high-end goods?
Not really. China may still lag behind, say, Japan, Germany or the US when it comes to making some high-grade, cutting-edge products, but it is catching up fast with these countries. In fact, it is already producing most mid-end high-tech products. And believe it or not, the toilet seats sold in Japanese markets which Chinese tourists are so fascinated with are actually made in China.
The demand-supply mismatch is, in reality, caused by the accelerated pace of consumer behavior transformation as a result of rising incomes and the failure of domestic manufacturers to prepare for and embrace that change.
I’ve lived in China for quite a considerable time including my graduate school years, travelled and worked in a few cities and still choose my destination taking into consideration the density of smog or PM2.5 particulate matter in the region.